"Unified" font use based on Stag

We are currently using a mix of Stag, Stag Sans for our materials (large type brochures, letters and Keynote presentations), as well as 'whatever is at hand' for emails and web (e.g. MS Trebuchet)

The recent availability of Stag as a 'direct' web font has opened the opportunity to unify our communications as well as look & feel. We would like, in particular to unify letters, web and email using the same font set.

I have tested Stag (headlines) + Stag Sans (body) for web and it looks quite good. However Stag Sans is still not ideal for everyday body text: punctuation a bit too tight and doesn't do numbers particularly well (e.g. for invoicing).

We are going to keep the Stag family as our headline font (and license it for the web) but I would like some ideas on what other body font we could use. The constraints are fairly basic:

- High legibility for both print and screen
- Native web fonts
- Either directly suitable for email or can easily be replaced by something not too shockingly different

I had a look at FF Meta Serif for example and quite liked it, but it doesn't seem to exist as a native web font.

There is no way to correct tight spacing with hinting on modern Windows systems. The fonts needs to be drawn wider and spaced looser prior to hinting*. Check out the Reading Edge series from Webtype, Aften Screen (mine) from Monokrom or the eText fonts from Monotype for examples of this approach.

FF Meta Serif is available for web use on fontshop.com. Click add, and select the web option. FF Meta Serif Web Pro is also one of the teaser families FontFont offer through Typekit.

* Low resolutions screens need looser spacing for text sizes than what is ideal for print. I think text on the Apple Retina screen also look better with some extra white.